USA in Serbia
- Posts : 35768
Join date : 2012-02-10
- Post n°101
Re: USA in Serbia
A sta veli Montgomeri, i on je bivsi ambasador
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★
Uprava napolje!
- Guest
- Post n°102
Re: USA in Serbia
Da, tačno. Pipav urednički zahvat i nisu se sasvim snašli.plachkica wrote:komentarišem tekst ne nju, bila je, ili je još uvek, zamenica specijalnog predstavnika umnika što je dovoljno da joj da uvid u to kakav je vučić, otpravnica ambasade je bila do 2010. 2 godine pre no je vučić došao na vlast. hil je peti ambasador od 2010. glas amerike je rešio da apostrofira tu, za vučićevu vlast irelevantnu, bivšu funkciju.
- Posts : 8095
Join date : 2020-09-07
- Post n°103
Re: USA in Serbia
Najduži deo teksta odnosi se na vreme kad je ona obavljala funkciju koja je pomenuta na početku, tako da na to treba obratiti pažnju, za razliku od naslova.
tldr: vučić laže
„Poznavala sam ga kada je došao na vlast, kada se njegova stranka odvojila od radikala i uvek je privatno govorio da to želi, da želi da Srbiju uvede u moderni svet, da želi da Srbija bude kontstruktivan partner i dobar sused, ali da ne može zato što ljudi ne bi to tolerisali. Znam mnogo Srba i u tom području sam bila duže nego u Ohaju gdje sam rođena. I postoji sedam miliona ljudi u Srbiji kojii su taoci te politike, koji žele evropsku budućnost“, kazala je ona.
tldr: vučić laže
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Sweet and Tender Hooligan
- Posts : 82746
Join date : 2012-06-10
- Post n°104
Re: USA in Serbia
http://www.nspm.rs/hronika/kristofer-hil-srbija-u-specificnim-okolnostima-kada-je-u-pitanju-uvodjenje-sankcija-rusiji-treba-joj-pomoci-sa-izborom.-srbi-kada-se-probude-u-ovom-ili-sledecem-veku-videce-da-su-albanci-uzeli-kosovo-za-sebe.html
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"Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."
Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
- Posts : 7214
Join date : 2019-11-04
- Post n°105
Re: USA in Serbia
"Срби када се пробуде видеће да су Албанци узели Косово за себе"
baš je normalizujuće frejmovao.....
- Posts : 41620
Join date : 2012-02-12
Location : wife privilege
- Post n°106
Re: USA in Serbia
Cousin Billy wrote:plachkica wrote:'Bivša zamenica šefa misije i otpravnica poslova u američkoj ambasadi u Beogradu u periodu od 2007. do 2010. godine'
sigurna sam da bi i neki bivši kuvar iz usa rezidencije imao šta da kaže, kakvo je ovo novinarstvo?
Otpravnik poslova je visok diplomatski čin, tako reći zamenik ambasadora ili privremeni ambasador. Dženifer Braš ne samo da je obavljala ovu funkciju već je, ako se ne varam, posle toga u Stejt Departmentu bila zadužena za ovaj deo Evrope. Dosta uticajna osoba, u dužem vremenskom periodu.
You can't just brush her off.
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cousin for roasting the rakija
И кажем себи у сну, еј бре коњу па ти ни немаш озвучење, имаш оне две кутијице око монитора, видећеш кад се пробудиш...
- Posts : 82746
Join date : 2012-06-10
- Post n°107
Re: USA in Serbia
https://rs.n1info.com/vesti/hil-upozorio-bih-srbe-da-razumeju-da-ovo-nije-ona-njihova-majka-rusija/
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"Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."
Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
- Posts : 16548
Join date : 2014-11-06
- Post n°109
Re: USA in Serbia
stižu drugačiji vetrovi iz amerike
(zna li se ko je ova budala?)
http://ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/featured-articles/2022/november/01/ukraine-asterix-and-rules-notes-from-the-birthplace-of-american-empire/
[ltr]written by nebojsa malic
“The first parliamentarian summit of the International Crimea Platform showed the world Europe ALMOST entirely united against Russian aggression,” the US embassy in Belgrade posted on Twitter last week, accompanied by a map showing all of the continent in blue – with Belarus, Serbia and the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad in grey.
No doubt the embassy thought this would bring home the “isolation” of Serbia. Not the first time, however, the Imperial legation had miscalculated. The map made Serbia look more like the “one small village of indomitable Gauls” from the famous prologue of Asterix, while the representation of “Kosovo” as a separate, independent state just lost Washington another 10 points in favorability polls. I know this, because I had just come back from several weeks in Serbia and Bosnia, where the vibe was very much in evidence.
American ambassadors in Belgrade have acted less like diplomats and more like imperial gauleiters ever since the October 2000 “color revolution” that ousted the legitimately elected Slobodan Milosevic and installed a US-friendly regime. Activists trained in Hungary by the National Endowment for Democracy went so far as to sack the Yugoslav National Assembly and torch the ballots, so no one could dispute their claims. Yet the Western media did not label them “insurrectionists” or “election deniers,” but celebrated them as democratic democrats. The model was then applied elsewhere, including Ukraine – twice, in 2004 and 2014 – triggering the conflict that eventually went fully kinetic.
The current gauleiter is one Christopher Hill, a 1990s sidekick of Richard Holbrooke. Not a day goes by that the condescending Hill doesn’t lecture the Serbs on what they “must” do to please him and the Globalist American Empire (aka Our Democracy). His predecessor Anthony Godfrey was a gaffe machine in his own right, but at least he had enough charm – genuine or manufactured – to compliment the country’s cuisine. The dour Hill can’t be bothered; he’s a downgrade even from Godfrey’s humorless predecessor Kyle Scott, who had actually forced Serbian media to transliterate his surname as “Scat” instead, believing it less offensive.
Hill objective is the same as it has been for ambassadors over the past 21 years: compel the Serbian government to recognize “Kosovo” as independent, and thereby retroactively justify NATO’s 1999 air war that resulted in the province’s occupation. Whatever one wishes to hold against current president Aleksandar Vucic, he has – so far – refused to do so, even when told outright this would be the necessary precondition for Serbia’s (still very hypothetical) entry into the EU. Yet Vucic’s continues to maintain Serbia’s future is with the bloc, even as the EU is imploding from a combination of consequences from pandemic lockdowns and hare-brained trade embargoes against Russia over the conflict in Ukraine.
The vast majority of Serbs are opposed to recognizing Kosovo and embargoing Russia. The rest amount to professional “woke” activists reciting Imperial talking points in Western-owned media to justify their grants and projects, their words falling on deaf ears. Much like their US counterparts, they are unable to be decent, even tactically: When the women’s volleyball team defended their word title, these moral busybodies insisted the patriotic song belted out by the celebrating crowd (“Rejoice the Serbian kindred“) amounted to bigotry.
Their approach is about as effective as the Ukrainian method of pressuring Belgrade to side with Kiev: phoned-in bomb threats against the airport, schools and other public buildings. All have been fake, so far, but with a regime perfectly willing to assassinate Darya Dugina or suicide-bomb the Crimean Bridge, one can never tell.
If Serbia is quasi-occupied but defiant, the neighboring Bosnia is simply schizophrenic. The US-brokered deal to end the civil war in 1995 partitioned the country into the Muslim-Croat Federation and the Serb Republic (RS), with a rudimentary central government. Rather than find a modus vivendi and live side by side in peace, however, the Muslims continued to claim the country was rightly their nation-state and demand centralization.
Party politics has entirely coalesced around ethnic interests. The only major upset in the October general election was the defeat of Bakir Izetbegovic, whose nepotism and corruption must have finally angered enough Muslims. Even so, the setback was only personal – his party still got the most votes in Muslim jurisdictions. However lackluster Bakir (and his vain, power-hungry wife) may be, the vision of his father Alija – wartime leader of the Bosnian Muslims, who in 1971 wrote a manifesto urging the rejection of democracy and socialism alike and RETURN to Islamic political forms – continues to hold sway.
Over in the Serb Republic, the US-backed opposition tried to stage a “color revolution,” accusing the dominant SNSD party of election shenanigans in order to stop Milorad Dodik from becoming president. It didn’t work: even when the central elections authority in Sarajevo – illegally – took over the vote-counting, they found no irregularities. Meanwhile, over 50,000 people rallied in Banja Luka in support of Dodik.
Bosnia’s domestic deadlock translates into external policy as well: the Serbs don’t mind joining the EU but are absolutely against membership in NATO – which Muslims want – and sanctions against Russia. Officially, the tripartite presidency cannot make decisions except by consensus. That hasn’t stopped the Muslim member from unilaterally endorsing the “Crimea Platform,” which is why Bosnia was shaded blue on that US embassy map mentioned earlier. So much for the “rule of law” or “norms” or “rules” the world order is supposedly based on: turns out the “international community” doesn’t care about any of those, if violating them achieves the desired result.
Sojourning in Serbia and Bosnia this October, I was once again reminded that is where the Globalist American Empire arose in the 1990s. Far from bringing order or prosperity, either to the American people or the foreigners it sought to conquer, it has fueled chaos and misery at home and abroad. Its obsession with power is now destroying lives and livelihoods in Ukraine and raising the specter of a nuclear war. Meanwhile, that “one small village” indomitably abides.[/ltr]
(zna li se ko je ova budala?)
http://ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/featured-articles/2022/november/01/ukraine-asterix-and-rules-notes-from-the-birthplace-of-american-empire/
[ltr]Ukraine, Asterix and Rules: Notes from the Birthplace of American Empire[/ltr]
[ltr]written by nebojsa malic
“The first parliamentarian summit of the International Crimea Platform showed the world Europe ALMOST entirely united against Russian aggression,” the US embassy in Belgrade posted on Twitter last week, accompanied by a map showing all of the continent in blue – with Belarus, Serbia and the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad in grey.
No doubt the embassy thought this would bring home the “isolation” of Serbia. Not the first time, however, the Imperial legation had miscalculated. The map made Serbia look more like the “one small village of indomitable Gauls” from the famous prologue of Asterix, while the representation of “Kosovo” as a separate, independent state just lost Washington another 10 points in favorability polls. I know this, because I had just come back from several weeks in Serbia and Bosnia, where the vibe was very much in evidence.
American ambassadors in Belgrade have acted less like diplomats and more like imperial gauleiters ever since the October 2000 “color revolution” that ousted the legitimately elected Slobodan Milosevic and installed a US-friendly regime. Activists trained in Hungary by the National Endowment for Democracy went so far as to sack the Yugoslav National Assembly and torch the ballots, so no one could dispute their claims. Yet the Western media did not label them “insurrectionists” or “election deniers,” but celebrated them as democratic democrats. The model was then applied elsewhere, including Ukraine – twice, in 2004 and 2014 – triggering the conflict that eventually went fully kinetic.
The current gauleiter is one Christopher Hill, a 1990s sidekick of Richard Holbrooke. Not a day goes by that the condescending Hill doesn’t lecture the Serbs on what they “must” do to please him and the Globalist American Empire (aka Our Democracy). His predecessor Anthony Godfrey was a gaffe machine in his own right, but at least he had enough charm – genuine or manufactured – to compliment the country’s cuisine. The dour Hill can’t be bothered; he’s a downgrade even from Godfrey’s humorless predecessor Kyle Scott, who had actually forced Serbian media to transliterate his surname as “Scat” instead, believing it less offensive.
Hill objective is the same as it has been for ambassadors over the past 21 years: compel the Serbian government to recognize “Kosovo” as independent, and thereby retroactively justify NATO’s 1999 air war that resulted in the province’s occupation. Whatever one wishes to hold against current president Aleksandar Vucic, he has – so far – refused to do so, even when told outright this would be the necessary precondition for Serbia’s (still very hypothetical) entry into the EU. Yet Vucic’s continues to maintain Serbia’s future is with the bloc, even as the EU is imploding from a combination of consequences from pandemic lockdowns and hare-brained trade embargoes against Russia over the conflict in Ukraine.
The vast majority of Serbs are opposed to recognizing Kosovo and embargoing Russia. The rest amount to professional “woke” activists reciting Imperial talking points in Western-owned media to justify their grants and projects, their words falling on deaf ears. Much like their US counterparts, they are unable to be decent, even tactically: When the women’s volleyball team defended their word title, these moral busybodies insisted the patriotic song belted out by the celebrating crowd (“Rejoice the Serbian kindred“) amounted to bigotry.
Their approach is about as effective as the Ukrainian method of pressuring Belgrade to side with Kiev: phoned-in bomb threats against the airport, schools and other public buildings. All have been fake, so far, but with a regime perfectly willing to assassinate Darya Dugina or suicide-bomb the Crimean Bridge, one can never tell.
If Serbia is quasi-occupied but defiant, the neighboring Bosnia is simply schizophrenic. The US-brokered deal to end the civil war in 1995 partitioned the country into the Muslim-Croat Federation and the Serb Republic (RS), with a rudimentary central government. Rather than find a modus vivendi and live side by side in peace, however, the Muslims continued to claim the country was rightly their nation-state and demand centralization.
Party politics has entirely coalesced around ethnic interests. The only major upset in the October general election was the defeat of Bakir Izetbegovic, whose nepotism and corruption must have finally angered enough Muslims. Even so, the setback was only personal – his party still got the most votes in Muslim jurisdictions. However lackluster Bakir (and his vain, power-hungry wife) may be, the vision of his father Alija – wartime leader of the Bosnian Muslims, who in 1971 wrote a manifesto urging the rejection of democracy and socialism alike and RETURN to Islamic political forms – continues to hold sway.
Over in the Serb Republic, the US-backed opposition tried to stage a “color revolution,” accusing the dominant SNSD party of election shenanigans in order to stop Milorad Dodik from becoming president. It didn’t work: even when the central elections authority in Sarajevo – illegally – took over the vote-counting, they found no irregularities. Meanwhile, over 50,000 people rallied in Banja Luka in support of Dodik.
Bosnia’s domestic deadlock translates into external policy as well: the Serbs don’t mind joining the EU but are absolutely against membership in NATO – which Muslims want – and sanctions against Russia. Officially, the tripartite presidency cannot make decisions except by consensus. That hasn’t stopped the Muslim member from unilaterally endorsing the “Crimea Platform,” which is why Bosnia was shaded blue on that US embassy map mentioned earlier. So much for the “rule of law” or “norms” or “rules” the world order is supposedly based on: turns out the “international community” doesn’t care about any of those, if violating them achieves the desired result.
Sojourning in Serbia and Bosnia this October, I was once again reminded that is where the Globalist American Empire arose in the 1990s. Far from bringing order or prosperity, either to the American people or the foreigners it sought to conquer, it has fueled chaos and misery at home and abroad. Its obsession with power is now destroying lives and livelihoods in Ukraine and raising the specter of a nuclear war. Meanwhile, that “one small village” indomitably abides.[/ltr]
- Posts : 28265
Join date : 2015-03-20
- Post n°110
Re: USA in Serbia
Ko je ovaj dečko car?
Jel taj Ron Paul u nekom srodstvu sa Ru Paul?
Jel taj Ron Paul u nekom srodstvu sa Ru Paul?
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#FreeFacu
Дакле, волео бих да се ЈСД Партизан угаси, али не и да сви (или било који) гробар умре.
- Posts : 7659
Join date : 2020-03-05
- Post n°111
Re: USA in Serbia
https://www.rt.com/op-ed/authors/nebojsa-malic/
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"Burundi je svakako sharmantno mesto cinika i knjiskih ljudi koji gledaju stvar sa svog olimpa od kartona."
“Here he was then, cruising the deserts of Mexico in my Ford Torino with my wife and my credit cards and his black-tongued dog. He had a chow dog that went everywhere with him, to the post office and ball games, and now that red beast was making free with his lion feet on my Torino seats.”
- Posts : 28265
Join date : 2015-03-20
- Post n°112
Re: USA in Serbia
ahahaha rt ok ok
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#FreeFacu
Дакле, волео бих да се ЈСД Партизан угаси, али не и да сви (или било који) гробар умре.
- Posts : 3620
Join date : 2018-07-03
- Post n°113
Re: USA in Serbia
The pilot and the guy who shot him down are friends now. Here's him explaining to the pilot how he shot him down when he left the bomb bay door open, causing radar to bounce off the inside and revealing his position. pic.twitter.com/wVi2eLWQVZ
— wire mother (@Threepants_) November 29, 2022
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"Sisaj kurac, Boomere. Spletkario si i nameštao ban pa se sad izvlačiš. Radiša je format a ti si mali iskompleksirani miš. Katastrofa za Burundi čoveče.
A i deluje da te napustio drugar u odsudnom trenutku pa te spašavaju ova tovarka što vrv ni ne dismr na ribu, to joj se gadi, i ovaj južnjak koji o niškim kafanama čita na forumu. Prejaka šarža." - Monsier K.
- Posts : 7214
Join date : 2019-11-04
- Post n°115
Re: USA in Serbia
- Posts : 3013
Join date : 2020-06-19
Location : bizarr nők hazája
- Post n°116
Re: USA in Serbia
šta je to za američkog poreskog obveznika ništa 1 jokić na 5 godina
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Hong Kong dollar, Indian cents, English pounds and Eskimo pence
- Posts : 7214
Join date : 2019-11-04
- Post n°117
Re: USA in Serbia
Ko li se u Sloveniji opario za 40 milki nizašta
- Posts : 3013
Join date : 2020-06-19
Location : bizarr nők hazája
- Post n°119
Re: USA in Serbia
platili lajbahu da ne svira okolo
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Hong Kong dollar, Indian cents, English pounds and Eskimo pence
- Posts : 82746
Join date : 2012-06-10
- Post n°120
Re: USA in Serbia
http://www.nspm.rs/hronika/kristofer-hil-vreme-je-da-se-uklone-barikade-na-kosovu.-behtel-zainteresovan-da-bude-deo-resenja-kad-je-rec-o-energetskim-potrebama-srbije.-sad-zainteresovane-da-vide-odluke-koje-ce-srbija-doneti-u-vezi-sa-litijumom.html
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"Oni kroz mene gledaju u vas! Oni kroz njega gledaju u vas! Oni kroz vas gledaju u mene... i u sve nas."
Dragoslav Bokan, Novi putevi oftalmologije
- Posts : 19188
Join date : 2014-12-12
- Post n°122
Re: USA in Serbia
Gđa ista ona Markićka iz Hoda za život ili kako se to zove.
- Posts : 35768
Join date : 2012-02-10
- Post n°124
Re: USA in Serbia
Kako ono bi? Nikad veci pritisci. Zavrnuce nam kintu ako ne uvedemo sankcije
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★
Uprava napolje!
- Posts : 41620
Join date : 2012-02-12
Location : wife privilege
- Post n°125
Re: USA in Serbia
Погрешно читање. Гледају шта се ради овде, и то их надахњује да и они то исто раде код куће, и другде.
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cousin for roasting the rakija
И кажем себи у сну, еј бре коњу па ти ни немаш озвучење, имаш оне две кутијице око монитора, видећеш кад се пробудиш...